Beyond the Game: Real-life kid from 'The Blind Side' now works for Arkansas football

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (KATV) - His office is decorated with reminders of a childhood that inspired one of the most charming modern sports movies.

There's a Baltimore Ravens helmet, a Briarcrest Christian High School helmet, but perhaps surprisingly, no Ole Miss helmet. That's because Sean "SJ" Tuohy Jr., whose likeness was portrayed as the cute 11-year-old boy in "The Blind Side," now works for Chad Morris at Arkansas.

"Everyone wants me to stay as this 11-year-old kid," said Tuohy, an assistant director of football operations. "Some people think I 'Benjamin Button'-ed it, never aged or went backwards. I think it's disappointing to someone when I say that's me. 'Oh man, I thought you were much smaller and cuter!'"

The 2009 movie follows Michael Oher from impoverished upbringing to adoption by the well-to-do Tuohy family. Naturally, the film's success continues to affect Tuohy. His continued relationship with his brother is just as pertinent.

"You look back at it and think, I wasn't really like that, that's not how it was. [But] that's what it was like," he said.

"[Michael] excelled in football, he excelled in basketball, everyone socially loved him. He was someone you look at like, 'Man, I hope I can be like that one day.'"

How accurate was the film? Did he really try to get leverage with college coaches recruiting Oher?

"Leverage with everyone," he said, laughing. "I wanted leverage on whoever it was, wherever it was. I was making sure there's an in for me there."

Did he really try to negotiate with Nick Saban?

"I don't know how well the negotiating went. I think he was like, 'You'll get what you get and you'll be happy with it.'"

What about his mother? How accurate was the character played by Sandra Bullock?

"She's much worse in real life than Sandra Bullock was in the movie. That was two hours of my mom. Think about that as a 24-hour day, all the time."

Where the movie stops, however, Tuohy's story starts. He'd often hear taunts while playing sports in high school.

"'Good job, Sandra' chants and I remember we were warming up one time playing a school in football and they played the whole 'Blind Side' soundtrack before the game.

Unsure of what he wanted to do next, he turned to a family friend: Morris. The Morris family had vacationed near the Tuohy family in Destin, Florida.

"Coach Morris said, 'Why don't you come play football for me at SMU?'"

"Then, 10 minutes later, the phone rang and I looked at it and saw it was Leigh Anne Tuohy," Morris said. "If you know Leigh Anne, you know if she calls, you better answer the phone. I answer the phone and she was dead serious. She says, 'Chad, we're serious. He's coming. Do you want him or not?' I'm like, 'Yes ma'am. We want him.'"